Contracts Flashcards
Introductory Sentence: Article II of the UCC
Article 2 of the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) applies to transaction in goods. Goods are “things moveable” at the time of identification to the contract. A contract under Article 2 may be made in “any manner sufficient to show agreement, including conduct by both parties which recognizes the existence of such a contract.”
Contract Formation Requirements
- Offer
- Acceptance
- Consideration
Define: Offer
A person makes an offer when the person communicates to another a statement of “willingness to enter into a bargain” so that the other understands that “his assent to the bargain is invited and will conclude it.”
Define: Counteroffer
At common law, a statement is a counteroffer, rather than an acceptance, when the terms of the initial offer are changed.
Define: Open Offer
Generally, an offer may be revoked before acceptance. A promise to hold an offer open requires consideration in order to be binding.
Define: Acceptance
An acceptance is a manifestation of assent to the terms of an offer made in a manner invited by the offer. It is effective upon dispatch.
Define: Rejection
A rejection is a manifestation of intent to not accept the offer. It terminates the offeree’s power to accept an offer. It is effective when received by the offeror.
Define: Consideration
Consideration is a legal detriment or bargained-for exchange. A promise to make a gift does not constitute consideration.
Define: Preexisting-Duty Rule
Under common law, promising to perform a legal duty already owed to a promisor is not valid consideration.
Exceptions: duty is changed, unforeseen circumstances, etc.
What is needed to modify a contract under the UCC?
Good faith
When is promissory estoppel a substitute for consideration?
Promissory estoppel is a substitute for consideration if there is:
- A promise;
- Reliance that is foreseeable and justifiable; AND
- Enforcement is necessary to avoid injustice
Define: Gap Fillers
A contract for the sale of goods doesn’t fail because one or more terms are missing if the parties (1) intended to make a contract, and (2) there is an appropriate remedy for breach. Gap fillers include course of performance, course of dealing, and trade usage.
What is the difference between performance obligations under common law vs. the UCC?
Common Law: A party must “substantially perform” its contractual obligations in order to demand performance (usually payment) from the other party.
UCC: Requires perfect tender for one-shot deals.
When is a contract divisible?
- It is apportionable; AND
- The parties would have contracted for each part separately.
A party that performs one or more parts of the contract may collect payment for those parts even if he does not substantially complete the performance of his duties.
When can a buyer reject goods?
A buyer can generally reject goods for any reason under the perfect-tender rule.
Note: There are some exceptions to this–e.g., installment contracts.